Ze (Cyrillic)

Ze з; italics: З з) is a letter of the Cyrillic script.

Cyrillic letter Ze
Numeric value:7
Phonetic usage:[z]
The Cyrillic script
Slavic letters
АБВГҐДЂ
ЃЕЀЁЄЖЗ
З́ЅИЍІЇЙ
ЈКЛЉМНЊ
ОŌПРСС́Т
ЋЌУӮЎФХ
ЦЧЏШЩЪЫ
ЬЭЮЯ
Non-Slavic letters
А́А̀ӐА̄А̊А̃Ӓ
Ӓ̄В̌ӘӘ́Ә̃ӚӔ
ҒГ̧Г̑Г̄Г̣Г̌Ҕ
ӺҒ̌ӶԀԂ
Д̆Д̣ԪԬД̆Ӗ
Е̄Е̃Ё̄Є̈ӁҖ
ӜԄҘӞЗ̌З̱З̣
ԐԐ̈ӠԆӢИ̃Ҋ
ӤИ́ҚӃҠҞҜ
ԞК̣ԚӅԮԒԠ
ԈԔӍӉҢԨӇ
ҤԢԊО́О̀О̆О̂
О̃ӦӦ̄ӨӨ̄Ө́Ө̆
ӪҨԤҦР̌ҎԖ
ҪС̣С̱ԌТ̌Т̣
ҬԎУ̃ӰӰ́
ӲҮҮ́ҰХ̣Х̱Х̮
Х̑ҲӼӾҺҺ̈Ԧ
ҴҶӴӋҸ
ҼҾЫ̆Ы̄
ӸҌЭ̆Э̄Э̇ӬӬ́
Ӭ̄Ю̆Ю̈Ю̈́Ю̄Я̆Я̄
Я̈ԘԜӀ
Archaic letters
ҀѺ
ѸѠѼѾ
ѢѤѦ
ѪѨѬѮ
ѰѲѴѶ

It commonly represents the voiced alveolar fricative /z/, like the pronunciation of z in "zebra".

Ze is romanized using the Latin letter z.

The shape of Ze is very similar to the Arabic numeral three 3 and the Cyrillic letter E Э. The new letter is called э.

History and shape

Most Russian typewriters like this one were manufactured without the digit 3 as the letter Ze could be used instead.

Ze is derived from the Greek letter Zeta (Ζ ζ).

In the Early Cyrillic alphabet its name was землꙗ (zemlja), meaning "earth". The shape of the letter originally looked similar to a Greek or Latin letter Z with a tail on the bottom (). Though a majuscule form of this variant () is encoded in Unicode, historically it was only used as caseless or lowercase.[1]

In the Cyrillic numeral system, Zemlja had a value of 7.

Medieval Cyrillic manuscripts and Church Slavonic printed books have two variant forms of the letter Zemlja: з and . Only the form was used in the oldest ustav (uncial) writing style; з appeared in the later poluustav (half-uncial) manuscripts and typescripts, where the two variants are found at proportions of about 1:1.[1] Some early grammars tried to give a phonetic distinction to these forms (like palatalized vs. nonpalatalized sound), but the system had no further development. Ukrainian scribes and typographers began to regularly use З/з in an initial position, and otherwise (a system in use till the end of the 19th century). Russian scribes and typographers largely abandoned the widespread use of the variant in favor of з in the wake of Patriarch Nikon's reforms.[1] They still used the older form mostly in the case of two З's in row: ЗꙀ (the system in use till the mid-18th century).

The civil (Petrine) script knows only one shape of the letter: З/з. However, shapes similar to Z/z can be used in certain stylish typefaces.

In calligraphy and in general handwritten text, lowercase з can be written either fully over the baseline (similar to the printed form) or with the lower half under the baseline and with the loop (for the Russian language, a standard shape since the middle of the 20th century).

Phonetic value

The letter Ze may represent:

  • /z/, the voiced alveolar sibilant (Macedonian, Bulgarian, Bosnian, Serbian, Montenegrin, Russian, Ukrainian , Rusyn and Belarusian);
  • /zʲ/, if followed by ь or any of the palatalizing vowels, as in Russian зеркало [ˈzʲer.kə.ɫə] (“mirror”);
  • /s/, the voiceless alveolar sibilant (in final position or before voiceless consonants);
  • /sʲ/, if followed by ь in final position or before voiceless consonants;
  • /ʒ/ or /z̠/, (Iron dialect of Ossetian, but /z/ in Digoron and Kudairag);
  • clusters зж and зш are pronounced in Russian as if they were жж and шш, respectively (even if з is the last letter of a preposition, like in Russian без жены “without wife” or из школы “from school”);
  • cluster зч (sometimes also здч) is pronounced in Russian as if it was щ (рассказчик “narrator”, звёздчатый “stellar, star-shaped”, без чая “without tea”);
  • cluster дз can be pronounced (mostly in Ukrainian, Rusyn and Belarusian) as the voiced alveolar affricate /dz/ (Ukrainian дзеркало “mirror”) or its palatalized form /dzʲ/ (Belarusian гадзіннік “clock”), but if д and з belong to different morphemes, then they are pronounced separately. In the standard Iron dialect of Ossetian, this cluster simply stands for /z/; other dialects treat it as the affricate /d͡z/.

З-shaped Latin letters

Zhuang

A letter that looks like Cyrillic Ze (actually, a stylization of digit 3) was used in the Latin Zhuang alphabet from 1957 to 1986 to represent the third (high) tone. In 1986, it was replaced by j.

Computing codes

Character information
PreviewЗз
Unicode nameCYRILLIC CAPITAL LETTER ZECYRILLIC SMALL LETTER ZECYRILLIC CAPITAL LETTER ZEMLYACYRILLIC SMALL LETTER ZEMLYA
Encodingsdecimalhexdecimalhexdecimalhexdecimalhex
Unicode1047U+04171079U+043742560U+A64042561U+A641
UTF-8208 151D0 97208 183D0 B7234 153 128EA 99 80234 153 129EA 99 81
Numeric character referenceЗЗззꙀꙀꙁꙁ
Named character referenceЗз
KOI8-R and KOI8-U250FA218DA
Code page 855244F4243F3
Code page 86613587167A7
Windows-1251199C7231E7
ISO-8859-5183B7215D7
Macintosh Cyrillic13587231E7
gollark: Not sure about the other thing, but there's certainly a bad picture in it.
gollark: No, it actually *does*.
gollark: https://github.com/babel/babel/blob/f36d07d30334f86412a9d2771880cb566a82a9b6/packages/babel-core/src/api/node.js
gollark: Turns out *some* versions of babel do... actually include a picture of Guy Fieri.
gollark: https://medium.com/s/silicon-satire/i-peeked-into-my-node-modules-directory-and-you-wont-believe-what-happened-next-b89f63d21558I think this is a joke though.
  • The dictionary definition of З at Wiktionary
  • The dictionary definition of з at Wiktionary

References

  1. Ponomar Project. The Complete Character Range for Slavonic Script in Unicode.
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